Cozumel Cave Systems Data Table

Several underwater cave systems have been explored on the island of Cozumel. These caves formed within the island’s limestone bedrock through karst dissolution and later flooded as sea levels rose following the last ice age.

The table below summarizes geological characteristics, depth ranges, access points, and exploration status of several known cave systems on the island.


Cave Systems of Cozumel

Cave SystemLocationDepth RangePrimary AccessExploration Status
Aerolito Cave SystemWestern shoreline of Cozumel~15–60 ftCoastal cenote entranceExplored and surveyed
Chempita (Jade Cenote)Southern interior near El CedralSurface – ~160 ftJungle cenoteLimited exploration due to permit restrictions
Cocodrilo Cave SystemSouth of San Miguel near shoreline~15–60 ftCenote on resort propertyAccess restricted
Cueva Quebrada Cave System (Chankanaab)Western shoreline near Chankanaab~15–60 ftCoastal cave openingsExploration ongoing
Sin Nombre Cave SystemShoreline near cruise terminal~15–60 ftCenotes within Royal Village Shopping CenterExploration ongoing
Tres Potrillos Cave SystemJungle interior near shorelineSurface – ~125 ftSmall jungle cenoteChamber explored
Kuuchi T’uuchtaj Cave SystemJungle interior of Cozumel~15–60 ftCenote El Poso / Cenote Los CaballosExploration ongoing

Geological Characteristics of Cozumel Caves

The caves beneath Cozumel formed within the island’s limestone karst geology. Freshwater slowly dissolved the limestone over thousands of years, creating underground passages and chambers. When sea levels rose after the last ice age, many of these caves flooded. Today the caves exist beneath a freshwater lens that floats above intruding seawater, producing the haloclines commonly encountered by divers in the region.


Map of Cave Systems

For approximate locations of these caves, see the page:

Map of Cave Systems on Cozumel


Exploration of Cozumel’s Underground Caves

The discovery and exploration of several cave systems on Cozumel have gradually revealed more about the island’s underground landscape.

Many of these exploration efforts and the story of attempting to connect cave passages beneath the jungle are described in Rob Neto’s book Beneath the Jungle of Cozumel: Connecting the Crowns.